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Candy Nakamarra Kapi Tjukurrpa – Kalipinypa

This painting depicts Candy’s Water Dreaming site at Kalipinypa, North-east of Kintore. The painting tells the story of the rain and hail making ceremony for the site of Kalipinypa. Ancestral forces are invoked to bring on a powerful storm with lightning, thunderclouds and rain sending a deluge to rejuvenate the earth, filling the rock holes, clay pans and creeks and creating new life and growth upon the land. Today the Nakamarra, Tjakamarra, Napurrula and Tjupurrula men and women are the custodians of this important Water Dreaming site and celebrate its stories in the ceremonies.

Name: Candy Nelson Nakamarra


Language: Luritja


Community: Papunya


Biography:

Candy Nelson Nakamarra was born in Yuendumu in 1964, daughter to renowned Papunya Tula artist Johnny Warangkula, who taught his children how to paint whilst passing down family stories. They all paint the Kalipinypa Water Dreaming story, of the rain and hail making ceremony, which Candy continues to explore and reinvent.

Candy has a distinct, evolving style, employing bold contrasting colours and layering of drips, drawing and outlining to create sophisticated, sought after contemporary works, which she says “look as if they are breathing, with the drawing elements popping out of the canvas’”. Candy represents tali (sandhills) and running water in her backgrounds, and uses dotting to represent hail storms and rain. Through drawing shapes and motifs, she represents the waterholes, running water, bush tucker, water birds and flowers present after a big storm and the wanampi (water snake) which lives under the waterhole. 

Candy is fast becoming a highly sought after contemporary artist. Candy had her first solo show in Sydney in 2021, a three person show in Brisbane in 2022, and had her second solo show in 2023 at Vivien Anderson Gallery in Melbourne. In 2024 she was invited to have a solo booth at Melbourne Art Fair. She will be returning to Melbourne Art Fair in 2025 as part of a 3 person Papunya Tjupi show. 

Winner of the Interrelate Acquisitive Prize as part of the Wollotuka Acquisitive Art Prize (2012), her work is held in the Macquarie Bank Collection, Parliament House Canberra Collection, the Hassall Collection, Fondation Burkhardt-Felder Arts et Culture, Switzerland and The University of New South Wales Galleries, Sydney.


© the artist / art centre